Moneysavingexpert
22 month deals on credit cards at 0% balance transfers.
Scottish power fixed rates until 2014.
Slow cooker uses less than 1p an hour, cooker uses about 30p an hour.
Do coloured and white washes alternate weeks as washers gobble as much power as ovens.

Being a jock I&#8217;m a bit tight withthe old wallet in general but I use Quidco for any purchase I make,car insurance, sky, Burton, ETC the last 8 months I&#8217;ve beenrewarded with 300 quid cash back just for buying things I wouldnormally buy.

I pay for my bank account I knowthat&#8217;s a daft thing to do for some, but I get my phone insurancefree and saved about 900 on flights and holidays and tickets aloneover the past year.

As Jarrod points out,there are lots of ways to get more bang for your bucks.

Decide what you can't do without (need),what you have to pay out,come hell ,or high water,and then,as you have done,start trimming.

Being on a fixed income (pensioner),I also run a simple monthly spreadsheet,with income,and all my outgoings,and just keep an eye on what I spend,we also have a credit card,that sits in a block of ice in the freezer,handy for emergencies,but not so handy for impulse buys,by the time it's thawed out,9 times out of 10,you've gone off the idea of buying whatever it was!

Get away from BT phone and Broadband - plusnet & sky are as reliable but cheaper

Supermarket shop with the whole month in mind. My Mrs drives me mad buying 6 bogrolls for one week when she can get 24 for 2/3 of the price or buying 500g of Flora when 1kg is cheaper per 100g.

Quidco is great - just checked and we made £467.33 + £150 M&S vouchers since last December on stuff I'd buy anyway
Work from home - you are paying for Braodband anyway, you'll have no travel & parking costs. It costs a little more in Electric but it's worth it. Now pretty much every time I reverse off the drive the company mileage meter is running.

Doing your grocery shop online often saves money - you don't impulse buy - it takes a while longer so you tend to put just what you need in the basket - if you do a meal planner before you log on its even better - and even including the delivery charge you'll find your shipping bill goes down.

Buy a nice wooly jumper, a pair of fishermans gloves and a woolly over the head hat. Wear them indoors during the winter and watch those heating bills fall like a stone.
Eat: 1 bowl of porridge in the morning with a tin of fruit and 2 pints of milk. With a bit of practice this can be maintained indefinately. Keep a packet of Tescos oatcakes or a handful of All Bran nearby and take one every time you feel hungry.
Drink lots of water and avoid alcohol.
Keep the regime up for a year then count the pennys saved.

Try getting a solar panel deal, either you pay (about £6k) and you keep the feed in tariff 25p PKU, or do a free panels for the feed in tariff by a provider. Either way you use less electric. I changed over last March, and according to Eon, I am using 25% less electric, I am also paying £50pm less on my direct debit. However what you need to get is a meter which tells you how much electricity you are using (about £40 from Amazon) at any one time. That way you can plan you usage of electric so you can keep you power use below the input of solar generated electricity (mines 2.40kw).